Antonyms for ignited
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : ig-nahyt |
Phonetic Transcription : ɪgˈnaɪt |
Definition of ignited
Origin :- 1660s, from Latin ignitus, past participle of ignire "set on fire," from ignis "fire" (see igneous). Attested earlier as an adjective (1550s). Related: Ignited; igniting.
- verb set on fire
- The firing, at point-blank range, was so furious that the men's clothing was ignited.
- Extract from : « The Downfall » by Emile Zola
- The 'fraction' ain't 'ignited' yet and the doctors are worried.
- Extract from : « Thankful's Inheritance » by Joseph C. Lincoln
- The hydrogen is ignited and burns with an almost colorless flame.
- Extract from : « An Elementary Study of Chemistry » by William McPherson
- Matches, at the same place, are ignited, and wood is set on fire.
- Extract from : « Fragments of science, V. 1-2 » by John Tyndall
- But the killer instinct is dead in fighters today and it has to be ignited.
- Extract from : « Vital Ingredient » by Gerald Vance
- There are people in the cults who come to teachers and leaders to be ignited.
- Extract from : « Child and Country » by Will Levington Comfort
- Like an ignited fuse, instinct had been lighted in the people.
- Extract from : « The Mystics » by Katherine Cecil Thurston
- This is washed on to a filter-paper, dried, ignited, and weighed.
- Extract from : « The Handbook of Soap Manufacture » by W. H. Simmons
- Until the lights are ignited all its beauty is obscured in darkness.
- Extract from : « Great Pianists on Piano Playing » by James Francis Cooke
- The arrows of the orientals were often poisoned at one end, and ignited at the other.
- Extract from : « Sermons of Christmas Evans » by Joseph Cross
Synonyms for ignited
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019